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In the previous census, in 2000, the Census Bureau tallied 600,000 same-sex couples who were cohabiting across the country. In initial planning for the 2010 census, federal officials indicated that same-sex married couples would be tallied as unmarried partners who lived together, not as wedded spouses. But those plans were changed in part because of intensive lobbying by gay-rights groups. "We pushed for that change because we want to be seen and heard and represented as part of our country," Christine Quinn, the openly gay speaker of the New York City Council, told a news conference Monday. "It sets the stage for our work over the next 10 years -- to get sexual orientation added to the form so all of us can be represented, married or not," she said. Also at the news conference were actor George Takei, a former member of the TV cast of "Star Trek," and his husband, Brad Altman, who married in California in 2008 when same-sex marriage briefly was legal there. "We pay taxes, we vote, we serve in the military and yet we don't have equality," Takei said. "To get that equality, it's very important for us to be identified. This is what the census is going to do." The couple were the stars of one of the public-service videos shown at the news conference
-- in which Takei wore his "Star Trek" uniform, and Altman wore a tinfoil space alien hat. "It doesn't matter whether you have a legal marriage license or not," Takei said in the ad. "It only matters if you consider yourself married." One of the new ads featured Glenn Magpantay, a Filipino-American attorney, along with the African-American son, Malcolm, whom he and his partner have adopted. "I'm papa, my partner is daddy," Magpantay said in the ad. "We're really proud to be counted in this census." The ads were posted on the Census Bureau Web site, and some were scheduled to be aired Monday evening on Logo, a gay-oriented cable TV channel. ___ On the Net:
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